Despite their financial support, many upper-echelon entertainment executives did not attend--but it had been a busy weekend what with Whoopi Goldberg's wedding and the Weizmann Institute dinner honoring Steven Spielberg.

Much of the evening's buzz centered around whether the entertainer, musical theater star Patti LuPone, would say anything about the rift between her and "Sunset Boulevard" composer Andrew Lloyd Webber. The composer selected Glenn Close to take the show to New York instead of LuPone, who had a contract for the Broadway gig.

Onstage, LuPone traced her musical theater career from "The Baker's Wife" to "Evita" to "Sunset Boulevard." She closed with "As if We Never Said Goodbye" from "Sunset Boulevard."

"Boy, could I tell stories," she yelled out after her first mention of the song, which she announced as " one of the things from that experience that I liked."

When musical director John McDaniel played the song's introduction in the key it was transposed to for Close, LuPone stopped him and said, "No, in the original key."

The efforts of the task force were underscored by the evening's guest of honor, Sen. Paul D. Wellstone (D-Minn). A former teacher, Wellstone has been in the forefront of human rights issues and challenged proposals that would withhold federal funds from school districts that teach homosexuality is an alternative lifestyle.